The other Sochi: A tale of disrepair

On a recent summer morning, a group of students gathered on the
half-ruined stairs to the Ordzhonikidze spa
hotel, once the architectural pride of Sochi.
Built by Stalin’s commissars in the 1930s, it is now an abandoned palace.

The
students posed in front of a fountain decorated with three nude statues, the
highlight of Soviet Sochi attractions that for years served as a visual
business card for Russia’s
only tropical resort. It is now empty with dry leaves piling up around the
foundations.

The students have been working on a photo project they call
“Disappearing Beauty.” Marble walls and massive columns decimated by disrepair
symbolized for them the neglect of their once peaceful tropical city.

Until
recently, thousands of tourists and local visitors enjoyed the colorful variety
of Sochi’s beautiful parks and gardens, marveled
at gorgeous flowerbeds and water splashing in the fountains; couples kissed on
terraces overlooking the Black Sea.

But the Olympic rush has taken the place over – bringing crowds of
contract workers, cranes and bulldozers to every corner of Sochi. The remains of Stalin’s dream, the
Soviet Riviera, has been lost in the construction chaos, among glass and
concrete emerging in place of once romantic magnolia gardens and grape gazebos.

Outside Ordzhonikidze’s gate people
waited at a bus stop on Kurortny prospect, the only main street in Sochi. Tourists complained
of the slow traffic, high prices and dust from the construction. “We thought of
coming here we would escape Moscow traffic jams;
I dreamt of walks in the Dendrarium park, but Sochi
is not the same any more – the road is jammed and our favorite park is closed,”
said Lyubov Zakurova, a pensioner from Moscow
and life-long admirer of the resort.

The girls on the stairs shared their feelings about the most recent
changes to their city of 368,00 people. “We document the environmental issues
in Sochi on our
social network web pages,” Valeria Smirnova, 19, explained.

“It is sad to see
the most beautiful things disappear, so we hope that if we capture pictures of
dead dolphins on city beaches, write about dying trees and fish trout poisoned
in our Mzymta river, the authorities would pay attention and think of people
who will continue living in this town after two weeks of Olympic games,”
Smirnova, a student of journalism, added.

Two years ago authorities closed the Ordzhonikidze hotel for reconstruction, built
a high metal fence around it and put a “stop” sign at the entrance. No one
knows when it will open. The funicular that once brought both tourists and
local people to the beach also stopped functioning.

Humidity and wild nature took over the old Sochi’s walls.

Also troubling, authorities continue to demolish hundreds of illegally
built and public homes that happen to be in the way of construction. This
summer, 400 homes were in the path of the bulldozers.

In Sochi, Bulldozers are a bad sign for some
residents

Yulia Saltykova (L), a mother of two boys, has never seen much comfort. Source: Anna Nemtsova

Sochi
authorities continue to demolish hundreds of houses that are in the way of
Olympic construction work. It costs the state more than 3 million rubles
to tear down one small house and up to 40 million rubles to demolish a
multi-story building. Deputy director of the Federal Bailiffs' Service Tatyana
Ignatyeva confirmed that more than 400 Sochi
houses will be bulldozed before the Olympics commence.

Yulia Saltykova, 32, a
mother of two boys, four and ten years old, has never seen much comfort. She
lives a hardscrabble life on Acacia
Avenue in the Adler district of Sochi. Three
generations of Saltykova’s family live in a state-provided barrack-style
building without kitchens or bathrooms, without running water or gas supply.

Without
help from the municipal authorities, Saltykova’s parents and their neighbors
built all necessary facilities for themselves in the courtyards of their homes.

Related:

The neighbors hoped to live a peaceful life enjoying the view of the
North Caucasus, in the shade of thorn trees on a lovely road to the nearest
beach on the Black Sea.

The day Sochi
was selected to host the Winter Olympics 2014, Saltykova, euphoric, celebrated
and cheered the victory together with all her neighbors and friends. Crowds
partied all day along the sea embankment, and more than 30,000 people gathered
in the city square downtown to sing, dance and drink Champagne.

Troubles came to house No. 5 on Acacia in waves. All day long loud
trucks and bulldozers, unloaded tons of sand and gravel onto once a quiet
passage to Acacia street
to build a federal highway for thousands of spectators of approaching Olympic
games.

A concrete wall along the future road with plastic screen on top of it
grew higher, completely blocking Saltykova’s favorite view of the snowy
mountaintops. “The complaints that we sent to the Kremlin and Human Rights
Watch made our authorities even angrier – the city is suing us for not
demolishing our kitchens and toilets, that we happened to build years ago on
the way of the new highway, “ Saltykova said in frustration. “Turns out we do
not have a right even for our outside toilets.”

A red banner spread on the roof of Saltykova’s house reads "Help! SOS!
They're walling off people alive in here." But not many pay
attention, as more benefit from the construction boom.

On the day the court decided that Saltykova and her neighbors must
demolish their property to let the state construction continue, a press
spokesman showed journalists around the Olympic village. There was still a lot
for the construction company Olympstroy to do before the Olympic opening
scheduled for February 2014.

What did the organizers think about people who are dislocated by the
massive project? “This is not a question for us – ask the ministry of regional
development in Moscow,”
spokeswoman Natalya Cherepanova said.

In August, the Sochi
administration informed Alyona Khaladzha, 65, that her house on
Zheleznodorozhny Proyezd in the Adler region is scheduled for demolition on December
25th. “I am totally shocked – no officials wanted to hear that I’d been in line
for privatization for the last 20 years, and I am number 88 on the list,”
Khaladzha said, through tears.